• J Am Board Fam Med · May 2020

    Case Reports

    Primary Care Is an Essential Ingredient to a Successful Population Health Improvement Strategy.

    • Jennifer E DeVoe.
    • From the Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. devoej@ohsu.edu.
    • J Am Board Fam Med. 2020 May 1; 33 (3): 468-472.

    AbstractPrimary care teams bridge health care to other sectors, making effective connections between health care and health. For health care systems to improve patient and population health, the important role of primary care must be recognized, celebrated, and strengthened. This commentary explores several of the current hot topics in policy discussions (eg, social determinants of health, population health) and gives examples of how these theoretical discussions are relevant to the real world of patient care. It concludes with a few key points on how the system can better support the important population health improvement work done by primary care teams. Changes in the way primary care is delivered, reimbursed, and measured are needed to support the health promoting and healing work that happens continuously, not just during a clinic visit or inside the clinic walls. Renewed investments must be made to strengthen delivery models that enable longitudinal, trusting relationships to develop between patients and primary care teams. Payment systems must shift away from fee-for-service models to new holistic reimbursement methods that reflect the value of a comprehensive scope of primary care practice and continuity of care. Measuring what matters in primary care will help to realign our focus on health.© Copyright 2020 by the American Board of Family Medicine.

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